Meh - I probably should not post this... but here goes... and there is no "TONE" here - other than concern...
I dont care about the cows in Hindu, lucky them they get a long and happy life, I am talking about the horses in America.
Cows are sacred in INDIA,
Nicole. Hindu is a religion.... and language...
Horses carried man threw history, they deserve more then to be torchered on the way to a slaughter house, ripped apart and used for food.
The transport issues are the ones we are trying to address.... if you go back and actually READ
my post about the slaughterhouse... and give it the same kind of attention and credibilty as seems to be given to the sensationalist stuff... then maybe you can understand that at the slaughterhouse itself - sustained "torture" does not go on... short. Quick. BANG. And IMHO once dead - what happens to a body - even mine! - matters not. Why not "recycle" it?? Horses have also been
eaten through history....
Is this the same forum that was all upset because some one stuffed there mini horse foal? Might I ask the difference in sending that foal to a slaughter house to be used as food or to keep her body in the corner of the living room? I remember every one of you thought it was sick, wrong, nasty and the filly should have been laid in the ground and burried - but you mean to tell me it would have been better for her to be torn apart?
Bolding mine. That is not quite accurate,
Nicole. And what did you think about the stuffed foal??
*shrug* I could have cared less... if those folks wanted a stuffed foal in the corner of the living room - well, it was their business. Not my taste - but we all have different styles and opinions. And a foal that small would not have been processed... or "torn apart" as you say.... anyway.
I think you all change your minds like underwear and just go with the flow on different things for lack of conflict
Being one of the younger ones on the board does not grant you the permission ...
... to slam other posters for their opinions. I have worked in the horse industry for many years - from the bottom looking up... and can sadly tell you that on the scale of cruelty and abuse to horses...the slaughterhouses come nowhere near what goes on down the road from you in someone's backyard.... behind the scenes (and behind the barn) at horse shows etc. At the slaughterhouse - the suffering at least ends. Quickly. For many horses - it just goes on and on and on. They get beaten. They starve. While people are indignant about the slaughterhouses that they created a need for... the suffering continues.
Any how, dead horses, yes go ahead and slaughter them if you wish, but why go to a action and buy a perfectly healthy horse who could be used for ridding and change some ones life - why kill it? If any one hasnt noticed America isnt exactly lacking on food, in fact 90% of the americans could stand a little less meat and a diet.
Why breed indiscriminately?? If there were not too MANY horses - the supply would dry up. Everyone gets on the spay and neuter bandwagon for dogs and cats... but horses do not fall under that category. At least mares can't have litters...
And not every horse that goes through an auction mart is rideable... or healthy and sound in mind and body. I think people need to go to some sales. Lota of them. And see the couple drop off their kid's old mare, not even do a write-up about her - and drive away. Guess she was no longer convenient to have around. Is she well broke? Is she good with kids??
Supply some info... and someone might buy her. Or see the beautiful huge Quarter Horse stallion come into the ring - my he was stunning... with a red sticker over his tail... that means MEAT ONLY... or at least - the canners only. Why?? He was dangerous... and according to the auctioneer had seriously injured several people. He was not going to be used for riding. He had already changed lives.... for the worse. Now the owners could have taken him directly to the plant themselves - but they didn't. Blame them - not those who have to clean up behind them. I wish everything had an easy solution,
Nicole - but it doesn't. It is not the slaughterhouses that are to blame here - the problem is at our end. The slaughterhouses are just the final chapter and the end of the line...
OK and even if it were ok to kill a horse, which there is a great over population some do need to go, your all ok with the fact that some slaughter houses dont KILL the animal before hanging it upsidown and pulling it apart? Might I add that is after a long trip pack together like a sandwich, not fed for days and days, half of them die on the way there.
Bolding mine... so now you admit that "some need to go?" How do you decide which ones??? And how should they "go" then??
Why are you assuming that we are all "okay" with the horrendous stuff??
NO slaughterhouses process live horses. Watch the video on the link that
Love Coco provided ... if you can. No live horses being processed there. If one lousy slaughterhouse employee screwed up at one point... it is not the norm. Again - I choose to see things with my own eyes - and not rely on PETA-type organizations sensationalizing everything. The horse is DEAD DEAD DEAD before he goes on the hoist. Legs may flex a bit with the lift - but the horse is dead. That is for sure. I have seen enough necropsies to know that some muscle movement keeps twitching as a reflex.. but the horse is DEAD.
There is one sad picture that makes the rounds on assorted rescue websites, animal rights sites etc. A chestnut horse being lifted in the air, head down, outside... the horse is dead. Either brought there (to a plant) that way... or perhaps, sadly, a "downer" from a truckload. I have seen that same picture labelled and re-labelled to suit the needs of whatever the person hosting the site wants. I have seen it captioned as "a terrified horse writhing and struggling not to die on the line at the slaughterhouse".... or " the horrors of the auction mart where the dead are dragged from the ring" HUH?? ... or "the inhumane treatment of PMU mares who are forced to go in the barn..." Yep - you drag them into the barn upside down.... only NOT.
I use that as an example of the need to step back sometimes... and think about what you are seeing. We all follow our heart - we all love horses... but all too often are working at cross-purposes... and that does not help the horses.
Instead of firing off nasty letters to the slaughterhouses... work from the other end to dry up the supply. It is OUR fault (in the generic sense) that there are so many horses. That they are disposable. That there is nowhere for them to go.
The main cruelty here is the way some of them are hauled... and at least steps are being taken to address that.
******
Years ago I took my TB gelding... who had raced for 10 years (and thus been fairly successful at it) and then been "turned out" for a year before he came to me... skinny... and depressed. I bought him for $1... from the therapeutic riding association he had been "donated" to... as he was in much too rough shape for them to rehab. In time he became that sleek TB again. And as an adult beginner, I was often no match for his speed... and phobias
... and we parted company *cough* on many rides... but he taught me a lot. And I taught him that the phobias were silly... and he came to believe in me. So when his kidneys started shutting down one winter... it was clear the end was in sight. On a frosty -20 morning, a friend helped me load him up for the last ride - and we made an appointment... we drove into the city - to the side door of the "plant".... where a soft-spoken and sympathetic man helped us unload him... and led him in a side door (no ramps etc.)... I fed him some treats... and hugged him and stroked his velvety nose... and sent him on his way. Quickly. Painlessly. I may have driven off and left his body there... but his spirit stayed with me. Sometimes... I think he is still there. IF ANYONE tells me I did not respect that horse... and care for him... and do what was best for him.... well... I have no words. No. Words. *sigh* Except perhaps... how dare you....